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Counterpoint

In music, counterpoint is the relationship between two or more musical lines (or voices) which are harmonically interdependent yet independent in rhythm and melodic contour.[1] It has been most commonly identified in the European classical tradition, strongly developing during the Renaissance and in much of the common practice period, especially in the Baroque period. The term originates from the Latin punctus contra punctum meaning "point against point", i.e. "note against note".

For other uses, see Counterpoint (disambiguation). "Contrapuntal Forms" redirects here. For the sculpture, see Contrapuntal Forms (Hepworth).

In Western pedagogy, counterpoint is taught through a system of species (see below).


There are several different forms of counterpoint, including imitative counterpoint and free counterpoint. Imitative counterpoint involves the repetition of a main melodic idea across different vocal parts, with or without variation. Compositions written in free counterpoint often incorporate non-traditional harmonies and chords, chromaticism and dissonance.

Development[edit]

Some examples of related compositional techniques include: the round (familiar in folk traditions), the canon, and perhaps the most complex contrapuntal convention: the fugue. All of these are examples of imitative counterpoint.

Linear counterpoint[edit]

Linear counterpoint is "a purely horizontal technique in which the integrity of the individual melodic lines is not sacrificed to harmonic considerations. "Its distinctive feature is rather the concept of melody, which served as the starting-point for the adherents of the 'new objectivity' when they set up linear counterpoint as an anti-type to the Romantic harmony."[2] The voice parts move freely, irrespective of the effects their combined motions may create."[22] In other words, either "the domination of the horizontal (linear) aspects over the vertical"[23] is featured or the "harmonic control of lines is rejected."[24]


Associated with neoclassicism,[23] the technique was first used in Igor Stravinsky's Octet (1923),[22] inspired by J. S. Bach and Giovanni Palestrina. However, according to Knud Jeppesen: "Bach's and Palestrina's points of departure are antipodal. Palestrina starts out from lines and arrives at chords; Bach's music grows out of an ideally harmonic background, against which the voices develop with a bold independence that is often breath-taking."[22]


According to Cunningham, linear harmony is "a frequent approach in the 20th century...[in which lines] are combined with almost careless abandon in the hopes that new 'chords' and 'progressions'...will result." It is possible with "any kind of line, diatonic or duodecuple".[24]

Dissonant counterpoint[edit]

Dissonant counterpoint was originally theorized by Charles Seeger as "at first purely a school-room discipline," consisting of species counterpoint but with all the traditional rules reversed. First species counterpoint must be all dissonances, establishing "dissonance, rather than consonance, as the rule," and consonances are "resolved" through a skip, not step. He wrote that "the effect of this discipline" was "one of purification". Other aspects of composition, such as rhythm, could be "dissonated" by applying the same principle.[25]


Seeger was not the first to employ dissonant counterpoint, but was the first to theorize and promote it. Other composers who have used dissonant counterpoint, if not in the exact manner prescribed by Charles Seeger, include Johanna Beyer, John Cage, Ruth Crawford-Seeger, Vivian Fine, Carl Ruggles, Henry Cowell, Carlos Chávez, John J. Becker, Henry Brant, Lou Harrison, Wallingford Riegger, and Frank Wigglesworth.[26]

Counter-melody

Hauptstimme

Polyphony

Polyrhythm

Voice leading

Sachs, Klaus-Jürgen; (2001). "Counterpoint". In Stanley Sadie; John Tyrrell (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (second ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers.

Dahlhaus, Carl

; Schachter, Carl (1989). Counterpoint in Composition: The Study of Voice Leading. New York: Stanley Persky, City University of New York. ISBN 023107039X.

Salzer, Felix

Sources

Kurth, Ernst (1991). "Foundations of Linear Counterpoint". In Ernst Kurth: Selected Writings, selected and translated by Lee Allen Rothfarb, foreword by Ian Bent, p. 37–95. Cambridge Studies in Music Theory and Analysis 2. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. Paperback reprint 2006.  0-521-35522-2 (cloth); ISBN 0-521-02824-8 (pbk)

ISBN

Agustín-Aquino, Octavio Alberto; Junod, Julien; Mazzola, Guerino (2015). Computational Counterpoint Worlds: Mathematical Theory, Software, and Experiments. Cham: Springer. :10.1007/978-3-319-11236-7. ISBN 978-3-319-11235-0. S2CID 7203604.

doi

Prout, Ebenezer (1890). Counterpoint: Strict and Free. London: Augener & Co.

Spalding, Walter Raymond (1904). Tonal Counterpoint: Studies in Part-writing. Boston, New York: A. P. Schmidt.

An explanation and teach yourself method for Species Counterpoint

by Nicholas H. Tollervey

ntoll.org: Species Counterpoint

by David Nicholls from his American Experimental Music: 1890–1940

Orima: The History of Experimental Music in Northern California: On Dissonant Counterpoint

Virginia Tech Multimedia Music Dictionary: Dissonant counterpoint examples and definition

by Jeffrey Evans

Counterpointer:Software tutorial for the study of counterpoint

by Dan Brown, music critic from Cornell University, from his web book Why Bach?

"Bach as Contrapuntist"

"contrapuntal—a collaborative arts project by Benjamin Skepper"

by Alan Belkin

Principles of Counterpoint